
Stubbins Ffirth: The Doctor Who Drank Vomit to Prove a Theory
In the early 1800s, a medical student poured the black vomit of dying yellow fever patients into his own eyes, smeared it into open cuts, inhaled its fumes, and even drank it undiluted. And he walked ...
26 Jun 17min

Flight 19: The Lost Squadron That Birthed a Legend
Just months after World War II ended, five Navy torpedo bombers flew out of Florida on a routine training mission and vanished without a trace. A rescue flying boat sent to find them disappeared too. ...
26 Jun 21min

Tokaimura: When a Bucket of Uranium Triggered Criticality
A licensing board declared a nuclear chain reaction so impossible at this facility that they didn't even require a criticality alarm. That bureaucratic blind spot helped pave the way for one of the mo...
26 Jun 24min

The Tarim Mummies: Red-Haired Riddles of a Chinese Desert
Archaeologists in China's Taklamakan Desert uncovered 3,000-year-old mummies with bright red hair, tartan-style leggings, and twill tunics that looked like they belonged in ancient Scotland. For decad...
26 Jun 18min

The Georgia Guidestones: America's Stonehenge Mystery
A 19-foot granite monument stood silent in a rural Georgia field for 42 years, engraved with ten guidelines for surviving the apocalypse. Then, in the dead of night, an unknown bomber blew it to piece...
26 Jun 21min

The Great Train Robbery of 1963: Crime of the Century
In August 1963, a gang of thieves sat in a remote farmhouse playing Monopoly with real cash from the 2.6 million pounds they had just stolen, leaving fingerprints all over the board. That single blund...
26 Jun 24min

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch Isn't What You Think
You probably picture the Great Pacific Garbage Patch as a floating island of bottles and bags you could walk across. But sail right through it or look down from a satellite, and you would not see a th...
26 Jun 18min



















